Sunday, July 20, 2008

Whose Money is it Anyway?

Michelle Singletary writes a personal financial column for the Washington Post called "The Color of Money". Generally, it is a pretty good source of common sense financial advice for folks not in the stock options and buyout world. Today's column is off the mark though.

Basically, the column is a discussion of the merits of a plan put forward by left-leaning Center for American Progress and the Pension Rights Center, which advocates elimination of the option to borrow money from oneself within a 401K. This is yet another instance of the classic approach of the left to many social issues, and it is that the people of the US are not to be trusted with their own money. You see this played out in the whole issue of privatizing a portion of social security benefits. The rhetoric of the left comes down to one thing, and that is that the government has to protect people against their own bad decisions.

I don't buy this. If you build up wealth in a 401K, it is no different than any other asset. If you need cash for some other reason, it makes perfect sense to borrow against a 401K--as long as you pay the loan back. If you don't, you suffer the consequences...as it should be.

5 comments:

  1. why would you expect sane thinking from the left? If they had any sense at all, especially financial sense they would not belong to the political left.

    I think, therefore I rarely vote for Democrats.

    "If it wern't for double standards, liberals wouldn't have any standards at all"

    Liberals are the very best reason to vote for Republicans.

    The only mark liberals have made in life is in their underwear.

    See Neal Bortz' comments http://boortz.com/more/commencement.html

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  2. Good stuff...

    I really hate the "save them from themselves" paternalistic crap that comes from the Dems.

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  3. The political hacks who spout left thinking political ideology do not care what happens to this country. They want to be in power. They will tell any lie, betray any person, pay any price even to the detriment of our country to defeat our freedoms and gain power.

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  4. Kohl's comments illustrate how dangerously out of touch Washington has become.

    Singletary herself admits that much of the money borrowed is paid back - what's the problem?

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  5. I agree Goldwater. What's the big deal?

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